Word: limiting
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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There's more. Down at City Hall, Harvard has consistently used its muscle as Cambridge's largest landlord to oppose new zoning petitions designed to limit real estate development. Even when the community's best interest is at stake, Harvard has pursued its own agenda and systematically opposed height restrictions and preservation measures in Harvard Square. Last spring the University even thwarted a legislative effort to require commercial developers to build low income housing in the city...
Perhaps we have too high an opinion of ourselves, but we feel that we are realists, both in terms of our policies and in terms of our practical actions. We believe that we do not simply limit ourselves to appeals, mere appeals for disarmament and improvement in relations. We act likewise...
...part of responsible U.S. statesmen. Attempts have been made to portray them as nothing but pure propaganda. Anyone even slightly familiar with the matter would easily see that behind our proposals there are most serious intentions and not just an attempt to influence public opinion. All real efforts to limit nuclear weapons began with a ban on tests --just recall the 1963 treaty that was a first major step in that direction. A complete end to nuclear tests would halt the nuclear arms race in the most dangerous area, that of qualitative improvement, and it would also seriously contribute...
Last May the International Trade Commission decided that shoe imports were causing "serious injury" to the domestic industry. The I.T.C. in June ruled, 4 to 1, that the Government should limit imports of nonrubber shoes valued at more than $2.50 to 474 million pairs for the first two years of a five-year quota plan. Such a program would have stepped on plenty of toes. Footwear prices would probably have risen by as much as 15% in the first year. While protectionist measures may save some jobs, consumers almost always suffer because the limit on supplies drives up prices...
...emerged from the pages of a spy novel. Instead it leaped from the headlines of West German newspapers last week, as the country's most serious spy scandal in more than a decade grew even wider. Chancellor Helmut Kohl found the revelations anything but amusing. In an effort to limit the damage, Kohl last week dismissed Heribert Hellenbroich, 48, chief of the Federal Intelligence Service...